Fact check: Were Harris-McCready early voting results ‘leaked?’

Poll worker testifies on his handling of early-voting results ‘tape’

Coy Mitchell Edwards, a poll worker at the Bladen County early voting site, said he ran the receipt-like “tape” after early voting closed the Saturday before Election Day.
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Coy Mitchell Edwards, a poll worker at the Bladen County early voting site, said he ran the receipt-like “tape” after early voting closed the Saturday before Election Day.
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RALEIGH

This story has been updated to include evidence disclosed Thursday by the N.C. elections board. The new information doesn’t affect PolitiFact’s ruling.

A four-day hearing on voting irregularities cast doubt not only on the votes cast in Bladen County, but also the county’s election security and processes.

The North Carolina elections board voted unanimously Thursday to trash the results of the November election between Republican Mark Harris and Democrat Dan McCready. The board ordered a new election in the 9th Congressional District as well as in two local races in Bladen County.

The board cited absentee-ballot fraud by campaign workers — what its staff described as “a coordinated, unlawful and substantially resourced absentee ballot scheme.” But the board also heard from Bladen elections board workers who testified that they tabulated the early-voting results prior to Election Day – a violation of the law. A machine printed the results on a “tape,” which resembled a long receipt when revealed in the courtroom Tuesday.

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That afternoon, N.C. Democratic Party chairman Wayne Goodwin offered an explanation of the situation when he appeared on CNN.

“Early vote totals were released illegally before the election was over,” Goodwin said. Goodwin didn’t elaborate, which could leave viewers wondering how widely the results were shared and if they got back to Harris.

Additionally, the NC Democratic Party went on to imply that the results were “shared” or “leaked” to political operatives or even Harris.

On Feb. 18, an NCDP email headline said, “Key witness confirms early vote totals shared with Mark Harris.” In another NCDP email sent later that day, the party said results “might have been leaked” before saying “a key witness went a step further, detailing how the totals were leaked ahead of time.”

Early vote totals were printed too early. But were they “released” or “leaked,” or even “shared with Mark Harris?”

The state elections board called for a new election and adjourned its hearing without presenting all of its evidence. However, according to slides presented by the board on Monday, investigators found no hard evidence that early voting results were shown to political operatives.

“Early voting personnel working at the site had access to those results,” an election board slide says, referring to early voting ballot totals. “We were unable to confirm whether any early voting personnel divulged those results to anyone outside of the early voting site.”

A slide presented by the NC elections board on Feb. 18, 2019 during a hearing about the results of the Mark Harris vs. Dan McCready race.
North Carolina elections board

Here’s what investigators did discover.

Poll workers saw tape

Several Bladen County poll workers testified during the hearing on Tuesday.

Coy Mitchell Edwards, a poll worker who said he signed the early voting tape, testified that he saw some of the results on the Saturday before the election. The congressional results printed near the top of the tape and the results of the sheriff’s race were printed in the middle, Edwards said.

Agnes Willis, another poll worker at the Bladen County early voting site, testified that she noticed the tape on a table when she heard another poll worker react to it. Willis said Tojie King, a Democratic poll worker, was looking at the results of the sheriff’s race.

With the exception of chief judge Michele Maultsby, other poll workers also looked at the early voting results, Willis said in the hearing and in an affidavit.

Agnes Willis describes poll workers results from the an early voting site in Bladen County in 2018 and looked at results from the Sheriff's race. She was testifying at a NC State Board of Elections hearing on voting in the 9th District in 2018.

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Maultsby, for her part, said she took the tape and locked it in a “treasure chest” with other materials. She said she then gave the chest to Cynthia Shaw, who at the time was the Bladen County elections director.

Maultsby said Shaw is the one who suggested the results were leaked. She testified that Shaw pulled her into an office with an urgent question, the Charlotte Observer reported.

“When I went back to the office to turn in all my paperwork, we turned in the tape and the memory card,” Maultsby said. “She questioned me about it. She fired me up about it...She wanted to know who told something about it. I said not on my watch, uh-uh.”

The Charlotte Observer reported: “Maultsby said Shaw didn’t tell her what race results had allegedly leaked, or to whom.”

Michele Maultsby supervised the single early voting site, at a Bladen County library. She said that she secured a tape with early voting results at the end of the day and took it to the county’s election headquarters.

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Special relationship

Shaw’s relationship with Dowless has come under the spotlight.

During a hearing over absentee-ballot irregularities in 2016, Dowless told the board about a system he had with Shaw. Dowless said Shaw knew his get-out-the-vote workers put their initials on the corner of absentee ballot request forms, which the Washington Post reported in December.

Shaw also contacted Dowless when she learned of absentee ballot requests that had been forged, according to Jens Lutz, former vice-chair of the Bladen elections board. Lutz filed an affidavit with the NC elections board in December.

‘Way in the lead’

Sandra said she overheard Dowless tell Harris that he had more absentee votes than McCready. The conversation was on speakerphone, she said. Dowless told Harris that he was “way in the lead,” she testified.

Sandra testified that Dowless, asked by Harris how he learned that information, said he went to the local board of elections and saw who had voted.

Sandra Dowless, McCrae Dowless’ ex-wife, testified Monday that she overheard him talking to Mark Harris about the campaign and his get-out-the-vote effort.

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On Thursday, the NC elections board revealed that it had obtained a text message from Harris’ wife, Beth, to his son, John. The text was sent in May 6, 2018 (two days before the primary) and appears to relay early voting result totals from Dowless.

Screen grab of a text from Beth Harris to John Harris presented Feb. 21, 2019 by the NC elections board during its hearing on election fraud in the 9th Congressional District.
The North Carolina Democratic Party

Dowless relayed that Harris received 988 early votes and absentee votes in Bladen County, according to the text. In reality, Harris received 889.

The mistake was likely a typing error, said Howard, the NC Democratic Party spokesman. “Which suggests that Dowless did have access to the actual numbers in the primary (and likely the general as well),” Howard said.

‘Unable to confirm’

The improper early tally of results, as well as a witness’ description of overheard comments, indicate that the Democrats’ claims have some validity. But their claims could also lead people to believe the evidence is more definitive than it really is.

Rather than put their claims on the Truth-O-Meter, PolitiFact believes it’s more appropriate to provide this context and highlight the words of the state elections board staff: that investigators were “unable to confirm whether any early voting personnel divulged those results to anyone outside of the early voting site.”

This story was produced by the North Carolina Fact-Checking Project, a partnership of McClatchy Carolinas, the Duke University Reporters’ Lab and PolitiFact. The NC Local News Lab Fund and the International Center for Journalists provide support for the project, which shares fact-checks with newsrooms statewide. To offer ideas for fact checks, email factcheck@newsobserver.com.

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